“Very thankful for everything they did for us. Always responsive, reassured us every step of the way and obtained a great result.”
Miguel Orellana
✦ Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law, certified by the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization ✦
By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization · Cal Bar #285231
If you got hurt on the job in Camarillo, you have real rights. You should not have to take on the insurance company alone. Standing up for those rights costs you nothing up front.
Here is the short version. A work injury in California is covered no matter who was at fault. Your medical care gets paid in full. You get two-thirds of your wages while you heal. You get a cash award if the harm lasts. It holds for a Premium Outlets stocker, a hospital nurse, and a Las Posas Road line worker alike. You usually have one year to file, so do not wait.
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California (CA Bar #285231). He handles Camarillo claims at the Oxnard WCAB. The first call is free: (661) 273-1780.
Three things to do right now:
If your Camarillo job caused your injury, you likely have a valid claim. That means paid medical care, wage checks while you heal, and money for lasting harm.
Almost every hurt worker asks the same first question. Do I really have a case? If you were hurt because of your work, while you were doing your job, the answer is usually yes. California runs a no-fault system. That means you do not have to prove your boss did anything wrong. You only show that your job caused the injury.
It does not matter if one bad moment caused it or years of the same work wore you down. Both count. A fall from a stockroom ladder at the Premium Outlets counts. So does a nurse's back that breaks down slowly from moving patients. The law treats an injury that builds up over time as a work injury, just like a sudden one.
Coverage reaches nearly every worker on a Camarillo payroll. That includes part-time and seasonal retail staff, airport ground crews, and CSU Channel Islands facilities workers. It also reaches undocumented workers. California protects you no matter your immigration status. Your employer cannot use your status against you for filing a claim.
You can get full medical care, two-thirds of your lost wages, money for lasting harm, travel costs, and a retraining voucher if you cannot return to your old job.
California workers' comp pays five main things. Each one helps you get through the injury without going broke. Here is what each covers.
Medical care. The insurer must pay for all the care you need to get better. That covers doctor visits, surgery, physical therapy, scans, and medicine. You pay no copays and no deductibles. A semiconductor worker on Las Posas Road with a crushed hand pays nothing for the repair.
Labor Code §4600: "Medical, surgical, chiropractic, acupuncture, and hospital treatment ... that is reasonably required to cure or relieve the injured worker from the effects of his or her injury shall be provided by the employer."
Wage checks while you heal. If your injury keeps you off work, you get two-thirds of your average weekly pay. There is a state weekly cap. These checks can run for up to 104 weeks within five years. They are not taxed.
Money for lasting harm. If your injury does not fully heal, you get a permanent disability award. This is cash for the lasting harm to your body.
Travel costs. The insurer pays you back for the miles you drive to medical visits and the pharmacy. Keep your receipts and a simple mileage log.
A retraining voucher. If your employer cannot give your old job back, you may get a voucher worth up to $6,000 for school or job training. A Premium Outlets stocker who can no longer lift can use it to retrain for lighter work.
It depends on your lasting harm, your age, your job, and your future care. There is no set price. A free review gives you an honest read.
Here is the honest answer. No one can promise a dollar figure up front. Anyone who does is guessing. Your award turns on four things. How much lasting harm you have. Your age. How hard your job is on your body. And what future care you will need.
How does the harm become money? Once your body has healed as much as it will, a doctor scores the lasting harm. He gives it a percentage. For injuries since 2013, the law adjusts that score for your age and your job. The score can move up or down. That final number sets how many weeks of payments you get.
One thing often shapes the result. The insurer may try to blame part of your injury on something other than work. They might point to your age or an old injury. The law makes their doctor prove the exact split with real medical reasons. We hold them to that.
The table below shows general statewide ranges by how serious the injury is. It is a guide, not a quote for your case.
| Injury severity | Typical permanent-disability rating | Approximate value range |
|---|---|---|
| Minor strain or sprain, full recovery | 0% to 10% | $0 to $13,000 |
| Moderate injury needing surgery | 10% to 25% | $13,000 to $45,000 |
| Serious injury or single-level fusion | 25% to 50% | $45,000 to $110,000 |
| Severe or multi-level injury | 50% to 70% | $110,000 to $250,000 |
| Catastrophic spinal-cord or brain injury | 70% to 100% | $250,000 to lifetime care, often more than $1,000,000 |
These are general California ranges, not a prediction. Your actual award depends on your disability rating, age, occupation, and future medical care. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
Our firm has recovered up to $5,000,000 for a catastrophic spinal-cord injury and $1,500,000 for a cervical-spine injury. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes, because every case is different. For an honest read on yours, call (661) 273-1780.
A denial is not the end. It is the start of the fight. You still get up to $10,000 in care while they decide, and you can appeal within 30 days.
Do not give up if a denial letter shows up. It happens often, and it can be beaten. After you file your claim form, the insurer has 90 days to accept or deny it. Miss that window and the law presumes your injury is covered. While they decide, they owe up to $10,000 in care right away. They cannot freeze your treatment.
Say the insurer denies a treatment your doctor ordered, like surgery for a Pleasant Valley nurse's worn-out back. You can fight that. First the insurer runs its own review. If that says no, an outside doctor reviews it within 30 days. Miss that 30-day window and you can lose the appeal, so move fast.
If a judge rules against you, the fight still is not over. You can ask the appeals board to take a second look. After that, a state court can review the decision. And if your injury gets worse later, you can reopen your case within five years. There is almost always a next step.
One more thing. If your boss fires you, cuts your hours, or punishes you for filing, that is illegal retaliation. You may win your job back, your lost pay, and a penalty added to your award.
Tell your employer within 30 days, and file your claim within one year. For a build-up injury, the clock starts when a doctor ties the harm to your work.
Two clocks matter, and missing either one hands the insurer an excuse. Tell your employer within 30 days of the injury. File your formal claim within one year. For an injury that built up over time, the one-year clock starts on a special day. That is the day you felt the harm and knew, or should have known, that work caused it.
| What you do | Deadline | Law |
|---|---|---|
| Tell your employer in writing | 30 days from injury | §5400 |
| File your claim | 1 year from injury | §5405 |
| Build-up injury clock starts | When you feel it and know it is work-related | §5412 |
| Insurer must accept or deny | 90 days from filing | §5402 |
| Appeal a denied treatment | 30 days from the denial | §4610.5 |
Not sure where your clock stands? A free call sorts it out: (661) 273-1780.
Everything above rests on these California Labor Code sections. Each link opens the official statute text.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Camarillo cases are heard at the Oxnard WCAB, about ten miles west on the 101. Eman Yazdchi appears there often and knows its judges and doctors.
Camarillo claims are heard at the Oxnard district office of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board. The address is 1901 Outlet Center Drive in Oxnard. It is the only such office in Ventura County. From Camarillo, it sits about ten miles west on the 101. Eman Yazdchi appears there often on Camarillo files. Those range from Premium Outlets stocking injuries to Pleasant Valley nurse back claims. Las Posas Road assembly-line injuries land there too.
The city's busiest worksites drive most of the injuries we see:
Nothing up front, and nothing unless we win. In California, the workers' comp judge sets the fee. It is usually 12 to 15 percent of what we recover for you. If there is no recovery, you owe no fee. That way an outlet stocker and a hospital nurse get the same quality of help.
If your main language is not English, you have the right to a free interpreter. That right covers every hearing, deposition, and medical exam. The other side pays for it, not you. Our office helps Spanish-speaking Camarillo workers through the whole claim.
For a serious work injury, call 911 first. St. John's Pleasant Valley Hospital at 2309 Antonio Avenue is the city's main emergency campus. For worse trauma, two larger hospitals are close by. They are St. John's Regional in Oxnard and Los Robles in Thousand Oaks. Tell the staff your injury happened at work so it goes on the record.
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California (CA Bar #285231). Fewer than 1% of California attorneys hold this credential. He has represented hundreds of injured California workers and appears regularly at the Oxnard WCAB. More about Eman Yazdchi. Verify his State Bar profile.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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